View allAll Photos Tagged bubbler...
Soap Bubble Bursting
(Look closely or view large size)
My first attempt at shooting soap bubbles and to my surprise ....... I captured this.
Multi layer foam.
Taken with EF 100mm macro lens.
It looks like alive cells ..
Do you guess which trick I used ?
The "bubbles" in Arcadia NP at sunrise. This lake is beautiful at sunrise, sunset, and most of all during heavy fog! Such a beautiful place!
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Huge bubbles blown by a Hungarian family out side the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam, August 2013. Great entertainment..!
this just appeared in the washing up bowl and a horizontal film slowly domed as the heat of the water expanded the air trapped inside the glass- it was one of those moments when the camera happened to be at hand because I had been taking caterpillar photos in the garden......seconds later it popped and was gone.
(Bubble glass is an old form of window glass from the time glass was blown in the form of long cylindrical bubbles which were then cut and straightened out to make window pains.....the ends of the bubble showing a pattern of circular thickening were sometimes used to highly decorative effect - this useless bit of information has nothing to do with the picture above.)
One of my favorite Underwater Images from my travels,
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Colourful bubbles at the O2.
The writing is made up of a matrix of tiny lights - the words scroll past quickly, left to right.
This was very strange to photograph. With the naked eye, the text was very bright, clear and easy to read. However, I could not get a photo to reflect the real-life appearance. No matter what I changed (shutter speed, polarizer, viewing angle...) the writing always came out very dim, barely standing out from the background, and so very hard to read. Nothing for it, therefore, than some heavy-handed photoshopping to get it looking 'right'.
Go there, find the bubbles (right inside the main entrance), take some photos and see what I mean. Weird.
The only explanation I can come up with is that the writing appears bright to the naked eye because of some sort of 'vision persistence' effect. However, I couldn't re-create this using a slower shutter speed, so I guess the effect is to do with your brain's perception, rather than a physical optical effect.
Bubble machine before the square dance. I don't mind the blur as it captures the action and excitement of our youngest.